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Speck
الصغيرة

At a Glance

According to search-discovered classical Islamic scholarship, the concept of the 'speck' in the Quran is a profound illustration of Allah's absolute justice and omniscience. The Quran employs several vivid, tangible metaphors for the infinitesimally small, such as 'dharrah' (an atom or mote), 'fatīlā' (the thread in a date-stone), 'naqīrā' (the groove on a date-stone), and 'qiṭmīr' (its thin membrane). [3, 6, 7] Al-Tabari's linguistic analysis reveals these terms were used to convey the smallest imaginable value to the original audience. Ibn Kathir’s tafsir across verses like 4:40 and 10:61 explains that this imagery guarantees that on the Day of Judgment, no soul will be wronged by even this minuscule amount; every deed is meticulously recorded and weighed. [21] This synthesis across multiple Quranic contexts establishes a foundational principle of Islamic theology: divine justice is perfect and absolute, encouraging believers to value small good deeds and be mindful of seemingly insignificant sins.

📖 Quranic Context

A powerful and recurring metaphor for the absolute precision of divine justice and omniscience.

Demonstrates Allah's attribute as Al-Hakam (The Judge) and Al-ʿAlīm (The All-Knowing), ensuring no soul is wronged in the slightest. [4, 9]

References: 4:40, 4:49, 4:77, 4:124, 10:61, 17:71, 25:23, 35:13

💭 Theological Perspective

Reinforces the need for Muraqabah (consciousness of Allah) as every minute action is recorded.

Motivates believers to value small good deeds and avoid seemingly insignificant sins.

Serves as a potent reminder of the Day of Judgment and the meticulousness of the final reckoning.

Fosters a deep sense of accountability and trust in Allah's perfect justice.

📜 Hadith Perspective

The Prophet Muhammad (ﷺ) frequently warned against belittling small sins and encouraged the performance of small good deeds.

  • "Do not belittle any good deed."
  • "Beware of minor sins, for they accumulate until they destroy a man."
  • The concept of the 'mustard seed' of faith or arrogance.

Universal agreement among scholars that these terms are used to signify the smallest imaginable quantity to emphasize complete accountability.

💎 Deeper Insights

The Quran's 'Metaphorical Toolkit for Justice' is a hidden gem. It doesn't use a single, abstract term for 'miniscule'. Instead, it deploys a suite of vivid, tangible images from its audience's environment—the atom/mote (dharrah), and multiple parts of a date seed (fatila, naqira, qitmir). This reveals a sophisticated rhetorical strategy that makes the abstract concept of perfect justice concrete, relatable, and impossible to misunderstand.

Al-Tabari, Ibn Kathir

The 'Speck' serves as the 'Quantum Unit of Divine Accountability'. In the same way modern physics found a fundamental unit (the quantum), the Quran established a fundamental unit for moral and spiritual accountability. Whether it's the 'dharrah' (atom) in physics or the 'fatila' in justice, it signifies a level of precision beyond which there is no smaller measure. This frames divine justice not just as fair, but as scientifically and mathematically absolute.

Synthesis of classical commentary with modern concepts

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